Is This What Hearing Loss Sounds Like?

It may start so simply. You ask your daughter to repeat something. Innocent enough. You tell yourself that she was mumbling or background noise interfered. But you wonder: Am I losing my hearing? How will I know?

The truth is that hearing loss can be very subtle at first. You’re left wondering and denying as the symptoms persist. Learning more about what hearing loss sounds like will help you recognize what you may be experiencing. It will also prepare you for how your hearing may change over time.

It’s important to realize that very few people with hearing loss don’t hear anything. And for most of them, it started very innocently when they asked someone to repeat themselves.

Let’s take a look at the sound of hearing loss.

Conductive Hearing Loss

Someone who has conductive hearing loss can still hear sounds “normally.” They just sound quieter. If a parent ever asked you to “speak up” or didn’t realize that the TV is really loud, they may have conductive hearing loss.

When sound comes into your ear, it travels through the ear canal to your eardrum. Then it reaches three bones in your inner ear. One of these is the cochlea where little hairs vibrate with the noise. This vibration sends messages to the brain that are interpreted as various volumes and frequencies.

What Causes Conductive Hearing Loss?

Conductive hearing loss has many causes including:

Wax build-up

Ear Infection

Hole in the Eardrum

Fluid in the ear

Genetic condition

Stiffening of inner ear bones

Head trauma

Ear damage

In each case, something is interfering with the way sound is transmitted through the ears.

How is Conductive Hearing Loss Treated?

Conductive hearing loss is often temporary. It may just be a matter of removing wax build-up. But it may have a most lasting cause. For this reason, someone who believes they may have conductive hearings loss should make an appointment with an audiologist.

If you had the measles when you were little, you might have developed Otosclerosis, an irregularity in the shapes and function of the inner ear bones.

Treatment may be a matter of merely treating an infection or safely removing wax. If it does have a more permanent cause, then a hearing aids or surgery may be required.

Sensorineural Hearing Loss

A person with sensorineural hearing loss will hear sounds that are not only quieter. They also sound distorted. This can make it very difficult to distinguish sounds from others. Some sounds may not be heard clearly.

An individual with sensorineural hearing loss often thinks they understand what someone is saying. They may respond not even realizing they misunderstood. This can create frustrating communication problems with family and friends.

What a person doesn’t hear can vary depending on the cause of the hearing loss. For example, someone with age-related hearing loss typically struggles with distinguishing consonants. Someone with Ménière’s Disease can’t hear vowels well.

And sadly, things we love like music or children’s laughter may become less pleasing as the subtleties are either no longer heard of sound different.

What Causes Sensorineural Hearing Loss?

Sensorineural hearing loss is caused when the little hairs in the inner ear are damaged. These hairs don’t heal, and they don’t grow back.

These hairs may be damaged due to:

Age

Loud sounds

Meniere’s disease

Benign Tumor

Infection

Trauma

Medications

In each of these cases, something has damaged the little hairs in the inner ears so that they no longer pick up on the subtleties in sound that a hearing person takes for granted.

How is Sensorineural Hearing Loss Treated?

Unlike conductive hearing loss which may be temporary, sensorineural hearing loss does not go away. With time, it often gets worse.

You should get a hearing test before symptoms progress. Over time hearing loss can lead to, among other things:

Cognitive Issues

Relationship challenges

Safety Concerns

These risks can be significantly reduced with early detection and treatment.

Tinnitus

Tinnitus is a different kind of hearing loss that involves a constant or intermittent sound overlapping the sounds coming into your ear.

Tinnitus can take many forms and may sound like:

Ringing

Hissing

Roaring

Ocean waves

Crickets

Sirens

Whooshing

TV static

Buzzing

Music

Tinnitus has similar causes to those mentioned above. But it can be unique to the individual. While ringing and hissing are more common, some have described a single, annoying song playing over and over day and night for years. That takes getting a song stuck in your head to new heights!

If you think you may have any of these conditions, get a hearing test and speak with an audiologist regarding your options.